Since the signing of the Gaza-Jericho Agreement of 1994, as part of the Oslo process, the topic of incitement has assumed a central position in the formal relations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. The Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip (Oslo II) of September 1995 contains mutual commitments to take legal measures to prevent incitement. In the Wye River Memorandum of October 1998 it was agreed that a joint US-Israeli-Palestinian committee would be established to monitor cases of possible incitement and make recommendations on how to prevent incitement. In the Sharm el-Sheikh Memorandum of September 1999 between Barak and Arafat, there is a paragraph that calls for preventing incitement through cooperation between the two sides. The topic also appears in the Road Map put forth by President Bush in April 2003, in the Sharm el-Sheikh Fact-Finding Committee Report (the Mitchell Report) of April 2001 and in UN Security Council Resolution 1397 of March 2002. In Israel's remarks on the Road Map, which were forwarded to the United States in May 2003, Israel demands that the Palestinians cease incitement, but also insists that this demand not be mutual and that the Road Map not state that Israel cease violence and incitement against the Palestinians.